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Emergency Capacity Building Project. Health in Emergencies. The Control of Communicable Diseases. Communicable Diseases. 51-95% of all reported deaths in refugee populations In emergency settings we can predict and prepare for the following:
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Emergency Capacity Building Project Health in Emergencies
Communicable Diseases • 51-95% of all reported deaths in refugee populations • In emergency settings we can predict and prepare for the following: • Acute respiratory infections (ARI), diarrhoeal diseases (cholera, dysentery) - the most common • Vaccine-preventable diseases (measles and meningitis) still a problem • Malaria and TB • HIV – may not have disease burden of the above but much more attention is needed in emergency settings
Global Health Facts • 11 million children under 5 die every year • 6 million die every year of preventable diseases • HIV/AIDS kills 6,000 people and another 8,200 get infected every day • More than 2.6 billion people do not have basic sanitation • More than 1 billion people don’t have access to safe drinking water
Why we get sick Host disease Agent Environment
Assessing Vulnerability Determinants of risk (people) Health sector vulnerability… 9 indicators % access to health care % under 5’s vaccinated against measles Under 5’s inadequately nourished Under 5 mortality rate % access to clean water % access to sanitation % with adequate housing % with formal employment % females literate Contribution to the wider multi-sectoral assessment of risk Strength of the local HS Potential source of problems Ability to recover and keyhealth messages
Communicable Diseases • Overcrowding • diarrhoeal diseases, ARI • Inadequate quantity and quality water • diarrhoeal diseases, typhoid, scabies • Poor sanitation and waste management • vector borne diseases, typhoid, scabies • High levels of malnutrition • Compromised immunity, TB, measles, ARI • Low levels of vaccination coverage • measles, meningitis, yellow fever
Communicable Diseases • Population may bring infection with them from their home environment or from areas they have passed through e.g. malaria • The disease may be present in the new environment or host community; refugees who have not acquired immunity are at greater risk e.g. malaria or cholera • Disease may surface in the camp itself e.g. due to overcrowding or poor sanitation
Who gets sick • not everyone is exposed to the agent • not everyone who is exposed gets infected • not everyone who is infected gets sick • not everyone who gets sick dies
Diarrheal Diseases • Major cause of mortality in acute phase of emergency • Important cause of morbidity in post-emergency phase • Caused 70% of deaths among Kurdish refugees and 90% of deaths among Rwandan refugees in Goma • Most diarrheal illness is NOT caused by cholera or dysentery • BUT cholera and shigella only cause of major diarrhoeal outbreaks in emergencies
Causes of Diarrhoeal Disease Outbreaks • Common sources of infection are: • Polluted water sources • Contamination of water during transport and storage (through faecally soiled hands) • Shared water containers and cooking pots • Scarcity of soap • Contaminated food
Prevention and Control of Dysentery Standard diarrhoea prevention and control measures • Safe drinking water • Safe disposal of excreta • Personal hygiene: information on personal hygiene and handwashing with soap • Food safety • Breast-feeding – promotion and practical support to enable mothers to continue breastfeeding • Special attention to disinfection and hygienic practices in health facilities
Cholera - Basic Facts • Classical cholera may live in the environment; water is an important reservoir • Most infections are mild or asymptomatic; only up to 25% result in clinical illness, of which 10% at most are severe • Contaminated water, food, shellfish, and fruit & vegetables implicated in transmission • Funeral ceremonies & feasts may be associated with transmission
...ingredients for epidemics... • External conditions • gatherings • forcedmigrations • environment • Climatic conditions • seasonal rains • floods • dry season Cholera outbreak • Living conditions • over-crowding • sanitation • water supply • unsafe food Political context • Cultural beliefs • & behaviour (funerals) • Poverty
Factors Favouring Cholera Transmission in this Outbreak . • Inadequate water supply • An average of 6.75L/per person per day in the new caseload. • Proper hygiene measures such as hand-washing and utensil washing not able to be practiced • Poor latrine coverage • 55 persons per stance • The more people sharing a latrine the greater the risk of contamination • Using a latrine may have been a risk factor for transmission
Factors Favouring Cholera Transmission • Firewood shortage • 35,000 people competing for firewood • Stoves were not fuel efficient- firewood used very quickly. • Reheating food difficult • Mozambican refugees- shown that the greater the number of times households cooked per day the less the risk of cholera • Lack of non-food items • No non-food items (jerry cans, plates, cups, cooking pots) distributed • Soap only distributed once the outbreak started • Major contributing factor to poor food-handling and water storage practices.
Control • Health education • Surveillance • Prevention • Adequate water (quality and quantity); chlorination is crucial (water supply or water containers) • Adequate sanitation and disposal of excreta • Promotion of personal and community hygiene • Safe food handling • Adequate fuel to reheat food • Good handwashing practices among food handlers • Adequate non-food items • Hygiene measures in health centers
Control Prevention (cont’d) • Safe funeral practices - disinfection and hygiene measures are essential during funerals • funeral held within hours of death • disinfect the corpse • wash hands after handling corpse • trained heath worker to supervise funeral • avoid funeral feasts • Social mobilisation • Active case finding and health education
Acute Respiratory Infections (ARI) • Always a major cause of mortality in children • Major cause of mortality and morbidity in emergency situations, especially among malnourished children • Most deaths occur a few days from onset because of late or no treatment • The risk of death from pneumonia is highest in infancy: the younger the child, the higher the risk
Risk factors • Low birth Rate • Malnutrition • Poor breastfeeding practices: • Poor ventilation in shelters and indoor air pollution • Overcrowding • Inadequate immunization:
Prevention • Immunization with measles • Promote exclusive breastfeeding for first six months • Adequate nutrition • Reduce indoor smoke – chimneys • Site planning (avoid overcrowding, adequate ventilation) • Hand washing - may play a role in reducing pneumonia incidence
Measles • Major cause of death in emergency settings and all efforts should be made to prevent outbreaks • An acute viral illness transmitted by droplet infection • Highly contagious! Basic Reproductive Rate (average number of persons infected by one case if no one is immune) = 15 • Overcrowding contributes to the rapid spread of the illness • Morbidity and mortality is particularly high if nutritional status is poor, Vitamin A deficient and younger age (6-9 mths)
Measles Prevention Two components of Measles Prevention in Emergencies: • Supplemental vaccination in early stages of emergency • Measles outbreak detection and control
Who Should be Vaccinated Against Measles? • In emergency situations the lower age limit for vaccinations is 6 months rather than the usual 9 months • SPHERE advocates that children up to and including the age of 14 should be vaccinated • In an acute emergency, at a minimum, aim for greater than 95% coverage in children six months to under five • DON’T Forget Vitamin A!
Tuberculosis • Displacement/conflict may disrupt treatment and increase mortality and transmission • Overcrowding and malnutrition may promote transmission in refugee and IDP camps • In countries with a high prevalence of HIV infection may increase incidence of new clinical and infectious cases and promote transmission • But TB is NOT a leading cause of mortality in acute phase of emergencies
Treatment • TB not a priority in initial phase • Need security, stability of population and funding and major causes of morbidity and mortality under control • Priority is treatment of sputum smear positive cases • Remember a poorly managed TB control program is worse than no programme!
Factors that Increase The Risk of Malaria in Complex Emergencies? • Population movement and displacement (immunity and exposure) • Environmental deterioration (vector breeding) • Ongoing conflict (access)
Malaria • More than 80% of current complex emergencies are in malaria-endemic areas • Major cause of preventable morbidity and mortality
Treatment Protocols Taking anti-malarial drugs
Prevention - Vector Control • Impregnated Mosquito Nets • Indoor residual spraying of insecticide (“house spraying”) • Site selection and planning
Misting and Spraying Photo: WHO/TDR/Bahar
Factors Increasing the Risk of Malaria in Complex Emergencies Poor or absent housing (exposure) Location of camps or settlements e.g. placing camp in well-known flood plain or areas near water (vector breeding)
Principles of Communicable Disease Control in Emergencies • Rapid assessment • Prevention • Surveillance • Outbreak control • Disease management
Prevention • Non food items • Fuel, appropriate and sufficient water containers and cooking pots distribution associated with reduced risk of cholera and other diarrhoeal diseases • Soap distribution 250g/person per month • Health education and sensitization on maintenance of safe water, personal hygiene, and latrine use are vital • Vector control depending on type of shelter, human behavior and vector behavior • Indoor residual spraying and insecticide treated nets • Environmental measures such as draining of standing water • Community health care workers trained to identify main disease problems, refer and provide health information
Surveillance • First stage of outbreak preparedness is a surveillance system with an early warning mechanism to: • ensure the early reporting of cases • to monitor disease trends • to facilitate prompt detection and response to outbreaks • Diseases of major morbidity and mortality and outbreak-prone only • Standard agreed case definitions and standard reporting forms • Data flow mechanism with analysis and feedback • Early warning mechanism with appropriate thresholds for action
Public Information Faeces + Water = Typhoid
Six Core Prevention Measures • Site planning and shelter • Adequate space within and between shelters (SPHERE) • Safe and adequate quantity of water • 15 litres per person per day (drinking, cooking, bathing) • Sanitation, safe excreta disposal and management of solid waste • < 20 person per latrine and system of maintenance • Adequate general ration and selective feeding when indicated • Malnutrition increases risk and severity of infection • Measles vaccination is a PRIORITY • Basic health care
What not to do: • Starting with vector control before people have access to treatment • Fogging (larviciding) or simply dumping ITNs or insecticide treated plastic sheeting • Distributing untreated nets or not planning for (re)treatment • Planning programmes in isolation of other malaria partners
HIV & AIDS • HIV stands for? • Human Immunodeficiency Virus • AIDS stands for? • Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome • HIV and AIDS are not the same thing • 4 bodily fluids that carry HIV? • Semen, vaginal fluid, blood, breast milk • Most common means of transmission? • Unprotected sexual intercourse • Mother to child transmission? • Before and during birth • Breast feeding